Jeremy Ficca
Design Critic in Architecture

Jeremy Ficca is an architect based in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania where he is an Associate Professor in the School of Architecture at Carnegie Mellon University. Jeremy’s current work operates at the intersection of materiality and technology and is interested in transitions toward post-carbon architecture. This work explores the expansive role material practices play in informing the rapport we have with materials and the environments we inhabit.
Current work focuses on robust, bio-genic approaches to architecture that invigorate architectural expression through the use of carbon-sequestering hemp-lime. Jeremy’s work and teaching have been supported by various organizations, including the Carnegie Mellon PJ Dick Innovation Fund, The Alcoa Foundation, and Autodesk. Recent recognitions include an ACSA Best Project Award, ACSA Creative Achievement Award, and AIA Pittsburgh Honor Award. Jeremy’s work has been featured in Performative Materials in Architecture, Matter, Digital Fabricators, and exhibited at Roca Gallery London, The Mattress Factory, and The Municipal Art Society of New York.
At Carnegie Mellon Jeremy serves as Track Chair of the Master of Advanced Architectural Design program and founding director of the Design Fabrication Lab. With his students, Jeremy seeks to co-create a learning culture that foregrounds the ethical dimensions of design and articulates the values that inform our common purpose.
Jeremy is a licensed architect in Pennsylvania and holds a post-professional Master of Architecture from Harvard University, and a Bachelor of Architecture from Virginia Tech. Prior to his position at Carnegie Mellon, Jeremy was on the faculty at North Carolina State University.